Gene Kerrigan: Fooled by Wallace's false shame

I have always admired Sunday Independent journalist, Gene Kerrigan, as a writer who pulls no punches particularly when he’s writing about corruption in Ireland.

I was therefore very disappointed to read his article of June 24 where he effectively makes a complete fool of himself by defending the activities of thief, liar and tax evader Mick Wallace.

Kerrigan begins by making the idiotic claim that Wallace is the man to stop corruption in Ireland.

All Wallace has to do, according to Kerrigan, is introduce legislation that would make tax evaders ineligible for membership of the Oireachtas.

Once the legislation was in place Wallace would resign (with honour, apparently) and get on with what Kerrigan describes as his varied and useful life.

And, presumably, the people of Ireland would find themselves living in a land of milk and honey basking in ever lasting happiness.

Clearly, Kerrigan has been reading up the gombeen’s guide on how to defend the indefensible – some quotes with comment.

Wallace did wrong in defrauding the Revenue. He’s paid a price, quite rightly.

Wallace did do wrong but he has not paid the price.

He’s still contaminating our parliament. He hasn’t’ been brought to justice for his actions.

He will not be brought to justice because our corrupt political/administrative system makes no provision for taking action against the activities of people like Wallace.

To introduce and enforce strong, effective anti corruption laws would endanger the entire corrupt system.

This is not going to happen in the short to medium term.

Since the revelation, Wallace has brought to Irish politics a quality that has been blatantly absent – shame.

Wallace, to his credit, displayed the shame appropriate to his misbehaviour.

Only a fool believes Wallace is ashamed of his actions or that his activities can be excused by (feigning) shame.

He has/is exploiting the corrupt political/administrative system for all its worth to avoid accountability for his self-confessed crimes.

Only today we read that the thief/tax evader has refused to cooperate with members of the Dail committee investigating his activities.

Wallace, the man suffering from great shame according to Kerrigan, refused to supply the exact date when the settlement with Revenue was reached.

This is a key detail because he can only be investigated by his fellow TDs if the settlement was agreed after he was elected.

Wallace also refused a request to give Revenue permission to hand over their file to the Dail Members Interests Committee.

These are not the actions of a man feeling shame and remorse for his crimes, they are the actions of a man bent on evading responsibility and justice.

The odium heaped on him has by now become comical.

Odium, as all Irish politicians know, is harmless when compared to the great benefits to be had from operating within a corrupt political/administrative system that accepts corrupt practices as the norm.

In the great tradition of Fianna Fail supporters of the criminal Haughey, Kerrigan resorts to the ‘sure worse things have happened’ argument.

What about King Leopold’s economic and physical rape of the Congo and what about the shameful treatment of Eastern European mushroom pickers – Kerrigan bizarrely asks.

What kind of mushrooms, I ask, is Kerrigan on?

I don’t know Mick Wallace, but I’ve liked him for about a decade.

This final quote is, apparently, the reason for Kerrigan’s bizarre defence of Wallace.

He likes the man therefore he (Wallace) should be let off, should not be brought to account.

This narrow, blind mindset is common in Ireland. It allows criminals like Haughey and others to plunder the state with complete impunity.

Genuinely, I never thought Gene Kerrigan, of all people, would fall prey to such a damaging mindset.

Copy to:

Gene Kerrigan

Joe Higgins betrays his integrity

Jesus to Peter:

Before a cock crows, you will deny me three times. And he went out and wept bitterly.

Pat Kenny to Joe Higgins on the Wallace scandal:

Pat Kenny: Has he any place in Dail Eireann?

Joe Higgins: I think at the end of the day it’s the people of Wexford in an election that decides that issue.

Pat Kenny: Isn’t there a moral issue here?

Joe Higgins: Well, that particular TD is elected by the people and has to answer for themselves in that regard.

Pat Kenny: Is there not something perverse about someone who is a self confessed tax evader being a legislator?

Joe Higgins: At the end of the day Pat the Dail as an elected body directly from the people is in somewhat of a different situation than if you’re a minister you obviously would be gone immediately or…whatever.

Joe Higgins should be weeping bitterly for the loss of his integrity.

Wallace corruption confirms Ireland as an intrinsically corrupt state

It has always been the core claim of Public Inquiry that Ireland is an intrinsically corrupt state.

This claim is based on the fact that, unlike functional democracies, the Irish political system does not recognise or act against powerful and influential people when they are found to be involved in corruption.

This is not an opinion, it is a verifiable fact that can be confirmed by simply taking a look at how the endless incidences of corruption over the last four decades were or were not dealt with.

The acceptance of corruption as a normal part of Irish political life by the body politic has resulted in the disease spreading into every area of public and private life.

In particular, the spread of the disease into the administrative, regulatory, banking/financial/business sectors has resulted in very serious damage to the best intersts of Ireland and its people.

No action whatsoever has been taken to eradicate the disease for one simple but deadly reason.

The current body politic, that introduced and allowed the disease to fester, is still in power and is still putting its own interests and the interests of its friends and supporters before the interests of the Irish people.

The Wallace corruption scandal is just the latest example of how the corrupt system protects its own and demonstrates how the disease has negatively affected other sectors of socitey like the media and ordinary citizens.

Every incidence of political corruption that has gone unpunished, big and small, over the past four decades or so has chipped away at the credibility, trustworthiness and moral worth of those who inhabit the ruling body politic.

The system has become so corrupt, so dysfunctional that even those independents, elected by the Irish people in a desperate cry for even a semblance of honesty and accountability, have abandoned the people in favour of the corrupt system.

The credibility, honesty and trustworthiness of Irish politicians now stands at zero.

The damage they are causing to Ireland and its people is immense and ongoing.

While the Wallace corruption scandal is just the latest in a long line of such incidences it is worth analysing in detail because it clearly exposes what Public Inquiry has been claiming for many years – Ireland is an intrinsically corrupt state.

Let’s start with Wallace’s admission on live radio that he knowingly broke the law, that is, he knowingly carried out a corrupt act.

I under declared the VAT in the hope that…

What do you mean you under declared the VAT?

When I sent in the VAT returns I didn’t declare all the VAT I owed because I would have been put out of business there and then.

By accident or on purpose?

On purpose.

I made what I thought, even though it was illegal, I thought it was the right thing to do

These are the words that law enforcement agencies, politicians, ordinary people and, indeed, Mick Wallace himself should focus on and nothing else.

Once the ramifications of Wallace’s admission of illegality are dealt with, once the State, on behalf of the people, have brought him to justice, then the nation can indulge in endless analysis on the pros and cons of his behaviour.

Sadly, because Ireland is an intrinsically corrupt state, because there’s hardly a single politician with enough courage or integrity to stand up for Ireland and its people, no action will be taken against this renegade politician.

And because of that the people of Ireland will continue to suffer from the destructive disease of corruption.

Copy to:

Mick Wallace
All political parties
Independent TDs

Included below the Wallace interview of 7th June on Morning Ireland.

How are you going to pay the 2.1 million to owe to the taxman?

At the moment the company would be deemed insolvent and since the ACC moved on us in October and got this €19.4 million judgement agaisnt us we have been unable to get work

Up to that point I had been in an agreement with Revenue. I had made the declaration back in 2010 and I was paying so much a month.

But after ACC moving on us we were no longer able to get work so it’s unlikely that Revenue will get the money.

So you don’t think this money will be paid?

That would be my honest opinion.

Where does that leave you as a TD?

Well, Mick Wallace and Wallace Construction are two separate entities.

Mick Wallace does have a tax clearance cert, Wallace Construction doesn’t.

To the best of my understanding of the law Mick Wallace is allowed to have a tax clearance cert provided his tax affairs are completely in order which they are on a personal level.

Is this not your company?

It is my company, yes.

So how can you separate the two?

Well, if you understand company law. Wallace Construction, a limited company of which I am the managing director of and Mick Wallace the private individual is a separate entity. T

hat’s just the law, I didn’t make it up.

Do you believe that your are in any way personally liable for this €2.1 million tax bill?

I do feel responsible for it, I do not feel good about it.

Owing money to banks who took gambles by giving me the money the same as I took gambles by borrowing it…and I’m far from proud to be owing the Revenue money.

I had a very successful business, I didn’t go mad. A banking crisis arrived and my property value dropped dramatically.

I did my best to try and keep the company afloat. I could have just thrown the keys at the banks and everybody else at the time and walked away from it. It has been very difficult trying to keep it going but I tried but I have failed.

The economic crisis has proved too much for my company.

Just to be clear, the settlement that we’re referring to and when we say settlement that’s an agreement on a figure rather than the bill actually being paid, is this settlement with the company or with you?

With the company. The story behind the money was €1.4 million in VAT. I sold apartments and the money that was coming in all went to the banks because the deposits had originally been used for ongoing business and the money wasn’t there for the VAT because the banks were taking their maximum, we weren’t able to pay it.

I under declared the VAT in the hope that…

What do you mean you under declared the VAT?

When I sent in the VAT returns I didn’t declare all the VAT I owed because I would have been put out of business there and then.

By accident or on purpose?

On purpose. Obviously I was wrong to do so but I did so thinking that I could pay the VAT the following year.

If I had put it down at the time I would have been put out of business there and then. There wouldn’t have been any deals with the Revenue at that time.

I thought I could save the company and pay my VAT the following year but obviously when you’ve reached the point where I felt that that prognosis wasn’t going to work I made my declaration to the Revenue.

The Revenue came in then and examined all our books and they found that the declaration we made was accurate and then we asked to try continue trading and agreed that we would pay so much a month and that we did for over a year up to the point where ACC took the judgement against me in November 2011.

The €19.4 million people just to remind people.

Yes, and that was an end to the company because we were no longer solvent and were finished trading.

How many people apart from you are liable to pay the €2.1 million bill to Revenue, are there other directors involved?

No, just myself.

What would you say to people listening to you saying you owe €2.1 million to the taxman, that you knowingly declared a false VAT declaration, are you a fit person to remain in the Dail?

Well, obviously I believe I am. I acknowledge I was wrong but I did it in good faith.

I really did believe that I would have been able to pay the VAT and I was trying to save the company.

I had 60 people working for me, I was trying to save their jobs, I was dealing with four banks that were putting incredible pressure on me. It was a difficult decision to make at the time.

I made what I thought, even though it was illegal, I thought it was the right thing to do.

In hindsight it would have been better if I had just let the company go at the time.

Planning corruption magic: Now you see it, now you don't

So here’s how things are done in a banana republic.

Some very serious allegations of corrupt planning come to the attention of a government minister.

This minister does something very, very unusual, he instigates an internal investigation to see if there’s any substance to the allegations.

The investigation finds that there are indeed some very serious questions that need answering

But just as the minister is about to launch an independent, external inquiry he loses office and is replaced by a minister who thinks the allegations are spurious.

But this new minister can’t just ignore everything, even in a banana republic that wouldn’t look good, so he orders (another) internal review and lo and behold, this new review finds no evidence whatsoever of any planning corruption.

This ‘magical’ conclusion means there’s no need for an independent, external investigation.

And so, with a great sigh of relief, the politicians who got such an dreadful fright when the allegations were first made, can now return to their usual day to day work of collecting expenses, cheating the taxman and screwing ordinary citizens into the ground.

Happy days.

Joe Higgins joins the ranks of sleazy hypocrites

It was with a mixture of disgust and despair that I listened to Joe Higgins mouthing pure bullshit when challenged over the disgraceful response of the so-called Technical Group regarding the Mick Wallace scandal.

Higgins was, and I stress was, one of the very, very few politicians with any trace of honesty or integrity.

His reaction to this scandal has now exposed him for what he really is – a standard, bog trotting gombeen politician who is willing to sink to any level of hypocrisy in order to defend his particular patch of the corrupt political system.

He, and his confederates in dishonesty, were elected by Irish citizens in a desperate attempt to find some honesty, some accountability, some courageous leadership from the body politic.

When a blatant, straighforward, no argument case of pure political/business corruption was placed right before their eyes they could have stepped up to the plate and acted in the best interests of Ireland and its people.

Instead, they abandoned the best interests of the people by acting in defence of their own narrow patch of the corrupt political system.

I dont really need to comment/analyse any further on Higgins’ disgraceful behaviour.

His own words are more than sufficient to admit him into the sleazy ranks of traitorous Irish politicians who instinctively recoil in horror when asked to put the good of the country before their own narrow, hypocritical interests.

The Technical Group has absolutely nothing to do with this in any sense whatsoever.

The only group that I will accept responsibility for is the Socialist Party TDs and United Left Alliance.

In the Socialist Party we are not joining what is a chorus in certain sections of the media and some politicians demanding that Deputy Wallace resigns.

The fact that we’re not joining that chorus doesn’t mean that we take in any way less than seriously this issue.

But we also take very seriously the democratic rights of the 17% of the electors in Wexford who put Deputy Wallace into the Dail.

They have democratic rights in this and it is between them and Deputy Wallace.

It is not for other politicians or the media to decide who will represent them.

Copy to:
Joe Higgins

Senator Mullen: What is he on?

Senator Ronan Mullen thinks that politicians who are calling for heads to roll over the Fr. Reynolds case are missing the point.

If we are only going to hyperventilate, shout and scream and demand that heads roll, the public will not take us seriously as people with a genuine and important role to play in establishing the truth about matters of public controversy.

Politicians have a genuine and important role to play in establishing the truth????

What is this man on?

Standards in Public Office Commission rejects complaint against Minister Quinn

Predictably, the Standards in Public Office Commission (SIPO), has rejected my complaint regarding mileage claims made by Minister for Education Ruairi Quinn, as reported in the Irish Mail on Sunday.

When I submitted the complaint to SIPO I had no expectation whatsoever that the Commission would rule against the Minister.

Over the years I have submitted many similar complaints to a whole range of government agencies for a whole variety of alleged wrongdoing.

Not one of them has ever resulted in sanctions or any other action against those involved.

My principal motive for submitting such complaints is to expose the fact that Ireland is a politically and administratively dysfunctional democracy.

The system is designed, whether intentionally or not, to protect politicians and others on the rare occasions when they are investigated for alleged abuses of public funds and resources

The manner in which Minister Quinn’s case was dealt with makes the point.

The Standards in Public Office Commission considered the case under the following headings.

The content of letters and enclosures submitted by Minister Quinn and his Secretary General

And

Under the provisions of section 4 (1) (a) of the Standards in Public Office Act 2001. Specifically, whether the Minister’s actions as complained of constituted a ‘specified act’ or acts.

The Commission decided that there was no basis on which to pursue the matter.

So where is the accountability here?

I requested access to the letters and enclosures submitted by Minister Quinn and his Secretary General under which the Commission made its decision.

My request was refused.

So here we have an ‘independent’ watchdog tasked with ensuring that politicians are made accountable basing its conclusions on secret evidence provided by the politician under investigation.

This does not happen in functional democracies.

Under the second heading the Commission seems to have concluded that Minister Quinn had committed no act that was inconsistent with the proper performance of his office.

I say ‘seems’ because the Commission provides no further explanation as to how this verdict was reached.

But the Commission was under no pressure to explain in any case because the legislation allows massive scope for the dismissal of practically any offence committed by officials or politicians.

For example:

An abuse of office allegation can be dismissed as of no significant public importance if the sum of money involved is less than £IR10, 000 (€12,700).

Under legislation the Commission can also dismiss a case if it forms the opinion that the matter under investigation was a result of incompetence or inefficiency.

This type of loophole legislation does not appear out of thin air.

It is very carefully drafted by professional civil servants working with the best legal advice and the full approval of the body politic.

Such loose, weak legislation is only one aspect of an all-embracing culture of secrecy, obfuscation, denial and non-cooperation that has created an environment where political and business corruption thrives.

Judge Alan Mahon’s verdict was as accurate as it was damning.

Corruption was deep-rooted, rampant and permeated every level of Irish politics.

Only a fool would claim that this deep-rooted, rampant corruption has, somehow, magically disappeared from the body politic.

Another consequence of political corruption is the almost impossible expectation that those with power will act to root out the disease.

A corrupt political system is unlikely to take any meaningful action to root out the disease of corruption because to do so could seriously damage the interests of those who depend on the corrupt system to maintain their power and influence.

This failure to act against corruption can lead to bizarre situations such as the incredible events surrounding Michael Lowry following the publication of the Mahon Tribunal Report last month.

Government ministers found themselves under intense pressure to explain why they had dealings with Lowry, a legitimately elected politician.

In a functional democracy this situation could not arise because the wayward politician would have been dealt with immediately by independent, well-resourced law enforcement agencies backed up by strong and effective legislation.

In addition, and parallel to law enforcement, Lowry’s political career would have been brought to a shuddering halt by an outraged body politic and electorate.

Such official and public ostracisation is of crucial importance for the maintenance of a healthy democracy because it prevents the disease of corruption from further infecting the political system and wider society in general.

The catastrophe that Ireland and its people are now suffering can be attributed directly to the failure of the state to act immediately and properly to countless scandals over the last four decades or so.

Every failure to act against an incidence of alleged corruption, no matter how small, hammered another nail into the coffin of accountable and transparent democracy.

The accumulation of such failures has, inevitably, led to the collapse of our economy, the loss of our economic sovereignty and the impoverishment of the state’s citizens.

There may well be a perfectly innocent explanation for Minister Quinn’s large expense claims but, to date, neither he nor his staff has provided any plausible explanation.

This failure, and SIPO’s failure to properly investigate the matter, is further confirmation that Ireland is a politically and administratively dysfunctional democracy.

Copy to:

Minister Quinn
Standards in Public Office Commission

Outsourcing justice

Pakistan’s Supreme Court has found Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani guilty in a contempt of court case.

However, the court gave Mr. Gilani only a symbolic sentence and he will not have to serve any time in jail.

Earlier this month former Icelandic Prime Minister Geir Haarde was convicted of negligence related to the collapse of his nation’s banking system.

Both of these cases contain a mixture of politics and farce; Haarde said his conviction was ridiculous.

The thing to note, however, from an Irish perspective, is that both of these countries possess a law enforcement system with the power and will to put even the most powerful in the dock.

It is inconceivable that the Irish law enforcement system would haul a sitting Taoiseach into the courts.

Such matters are outsourced to never ending tribunals until the politician retires or dies.

The Corruption perceptions index 2011

Iceland 13
Ireland 19
Pakistan 134

Fr Ted Republic

Letter in today’s Irish Independent and Irish Examiner.

Our Fr Ted Republic

It is certain that if a Mahon Tribunal-like report were published in any self-respecting, functional democracy there would have been immediate arrests and police investigations. In Ireland the response was predictable.

A copy of the report was sent to the DPP, the Revenue Commissioners, the Garda Commissioner and to the Standards in Public Office Commission.

There was the usual fake anger from politicians mouthing meaningless Fr Ted-like utterances such as ‘down with this sort of thing’ before heading off on their two-week Easter holiday.

Some commentators called for heavy fines to be imposed on those named in the report, some called for the Criminal Assets Bureau to investigate while others called for pensions to be withdrawn.

None of these suggestions will be acted upon, that’s not how things are done in our dysfunctional democracy.

We can see this from the response of the above-mentioned state authorities to the publication of the Moriarty Report last year.

At the time we were told that these authorities would, as a matter of urgency, examine the report for potential criminal charges.

Garda Commissioner Martin Callinan said an examination of the report by a team of detectives would be finished sooner rather than later.

Unfortunately, he did not provide us with his definition of the term ‘sooner rather than later’.

The failure to properly respond to the Mahon Report and countless other reports and scandals in the past tells us, and the rest of the world, exactly what we are as a country; a two-bit, backward, banana republic.

This will not change until arrests are made, charges are brought and justice is seen to be done.

Anthony Sheridan
Cobh, Co Cork

Gombeen clones set to perpetuate rotten system well into the future

Fine Gael Minister of State Alan Kelly, responding to the Mahon Tribunal Report on a recent Frontline programme (26th March), put down a marker on how Ireland is to be governed in the future.

Well Pat we can never ever, allow this to happen again. The simple fact is that Fianna Fail and others polluted this country with corruption for over 20 years.

The Minister didn’t specify if he was including Fine Gael in the ‘others’.

There’s a whole new generation of politicians including myself and michael (McGrath, Fianna Fail TD) who need to advance politics in this country in a progressive way. We cannot put up with what Fianna Fail has done in the last 20 to 30 years.

Immediately Kelly contradicted all his fine words when he defended the termination of planning inquiries by Minister for the Environment Phil Hogan.

Minister Kelly is a fool if he thinks Irish politics can rid itself of corruption while continuing to engage in Tammany Hall type strokes.

Fianna Fail TD, Michael McGrath also claimed that young politicians like himself were the future for Ireland and then, like Minister Kelly, immediately contradicted his fine words by telling us that people like Brian Lenihan, Seamus Brennan, David Andrews, Mary O’Rourke and Rory O’Hanlon were people of the highest personal integrity.

These are people who served themselves, their party, their party leaders (which included unquestioning loyalty to the criminal Haughey and the liar Ahern) before considering the good of Ireland and its people.

It is crystal clear from the attitude and mindset of Kelly and McGrath that they are nothing more than gombeen clones of those responsible for the destruction of the state.

Far from injecting new, honest, radical, reforming blood into the Irish body politic they are sure to perpetuate the same old rotten system well into the future.

Copy to:

Alan Kelly
Michael McGrath